You mistake lack of materiality for irrelevance. Tsk tsk.Quote:
Nothing like telling people their most closely held religious beliefs are irrelevant. Tsk.
You mistake lack of materiality for irrelevance. Tsk tsk.Quote:
Nothing like telling people their most closely held religious beliefs are irrelevant. Tsk.
What is RELEVANT? definition of RELEVANT (Black's Law Dictionary) (thelawdictionary.org)Quote:
Applying to the matter in question; affording something to the purpose. Iu Scotch law, good in law, legally sufficient; as, a "relevant" plea or defeuse.
What is MATERIAL? definition of MATERIAL (Black's Law Dictionary) (thelawdictionary.org)Quote:
What is MATERIAL?
Important; more or less necessary; having influence or effect; going to the merits; having to do with matter, as distinguished from form. An allegation is said to be material when it forms a substantive part of the case presented by the pleading. Evidence offered in a cause, or a question propounded, is material when it is relevant and goes to the substantial matters in dispute, or has a legitimate and effective influence or bearing on the decision of the case.
Nope, I'm saying it's immaterial. We all may have closely held religious beliefs, but that does not make all such beliefs essential to the faith.Zobel said:
So you are saying it is irrelevant then? Again, nothing like telling people their most closely held religious beliefs are irrelevant.
You also mistake an appeal to Apostolic teaching as an emotional attachment.
Tell me, counselor, why do you get to decide what is relevant and material to the essentials of the Christian faith?
You are not reading closely enough. Go back and read what I wrote here on page 1. The Faith is not subject to human decisions. It was passed on to the Apostles from Christ. St Paul says his doctrine is ratified by the words of the Lord, that he received the Gospel from the Lord directly, as he well as his eucharistic teaching. There is no decision here. Christ is the Truth, the Spirit guided the Apostles into all the truth, this is the Faith passed down once for all to the saints, and it was not established by any human authority or council. The question of authority is only one of affirmation that what is being taught is in harmony with the teaching of the Apostles. And this of course is exactly what the councils say. As I said, the test of "one true faith" is the continuous, unbroken adherence to the faith of the Apostles. Nothing more, nothing less.Quote:
But you are implying that, once you made your initial decision, some higher authority (the Fathers, Church Councils?) made all subsequent decisions of faith for you
First you tell me what the scriptures are, and how you know that they are reliable, and perhaps you can begin this discussion. I know exactly where the scriptures came from. It doesn't seem like you do.Quote:
For someone who is not a member of the EO, what evidence or argument is there that one should submit one's own rationale and relationship with God, and the plain reading of the Scriptures, to the Fathers or the EO Church Councils? Please don't refer to the Fathers themselves or the Councils since they are not persuasive to someone outside the EO and they are not self-authenticating .
How do you know what the essentials of Christianity are? Evangelicals can't even agree amongst themselves what these essentials are.Quote:
I think that this gets to one of the biggest problems that devout evangelicals have with the EO and the RCC - over time, they have confused the pointy hats and incense burners with the essentials of Christianity.
Maybe you are not writing clearly enough? Quit being so condescending.Quote:You are not reading closely enough. Go back and read what I wrote here on page 1. The Faith is not subject to human decisions. It was passed on to the Apostles from Christ. St Paul says his doctrine is ratified by the words of the Lord, that he received the Gospel from the Lord directly, as he well as his eucharistic teaching. There is no decision here. Christ is the Truth, the Spirit guided the Apostles into all the truth, this is the Faith passed down once for all to the saints, and it was not established by any human authority or council. The question of authority is only one of affirmation that what is being taught is in harmony with the teaching of the Apostles. And this of course is exactly what the councils say. As I said, the test of "one true faith" is the continuous, unbroken adherence to the faith of the Apostles. Nothing more, nothing less.Quote:
Quote:
But you are implying that, once you made your initial decision, some higher authority (the Fathers, Church Councils?) made all subsequent decisions of faith for you
Which evangelical scholar believes that? Every one I know of has studied the writings of the early Christians extensively and quotes from them frequently. Unlike you guys, however, we don't view the early church writers as inspired or authoritative. We turn to the Bible for that.Quote:
It's so funny to me that Protestants believe the earliest Christians and immediate generations had no idea what they were talking about
I think we've got to back up here and explore some church history. The idea of a 'me and my bible in plain english' is a statement born out of technology. Before the printing press, you couldn't cleave the bible from the church. And even the best bible, by itself, struggles to convey context. Yes, you can understand directly what Jesus said. but that only makes us as fit as the crowds Jesus preached to. It is only through the united orthodox and catholic church do we have preserved context of how early church fathers viewed the world, and came to the conclusions we find obvious.Jabin said:
But you are implying that, once you made your initial decision, some higher authority (the Fathers, Church Councils?) made all subsequent decisions of faith for you. What is the argument and evidence in support of those sources as being authoritative? For someone who is not a member of the EO, what evidence or argument is there that one should submit one's own rationale and relationship with God, and the plain reading of the Scriptures, to the Fathers or the EO Church Councils? Please don't refer to the Fathers themselves or the Councils since they are not persuasive to someone outside the EO and they are not self-authenticating .
I think that this gets to one of the biggest problems that devout evangelicals have with the EO and the RCC - over time, they have confused the pointy hats and incense burners with the essentials of Christianity. Their devotion to the Fathers and Church Councils has not prevented them from making grievous error. Your perspective would make Paul, the original protestant, in error when he confronted Peter and James in Jerusalem.
The true faith as you put it, suffers from the same problem as continually measuring the original meter. There's a rod in france that is the original meter, vacuum sealed. How do you measure it that it has changed over time? All other meters derive from that one meter. There are a half dozen or so other meters made from it and preserved as well. You can measure it against one another, but how do you know who has changed? A measurement cannot be objectively known, it can only be comparatively known. I think your question begs the same style of answer and can lead you down the wrong path.Jabin said:
Specifically, what evidence is that the EO itself has not strayed from the "true faith"? It seems to me that one of the biggest arguments against that claims is that it is dead. It is consumed with liturgy, doctrine, history and the like, but has no relevance to today. It has no indication that the Holy Spirit fills it or is working through it. Of course incense is referenced in the Bible - it's just not supposed to be the central aspect of our faith. Christ called out the Pharisees for majoring on the minor, on the irrelevant, and ignoring the core aspects and truths of God's word.
Of course. That's why the invention of the printing press may have been one of God's great gifts to his people. It allowed them to see, with their own eyes for the first time, the horrible lies that were being taught to them by the RCC.Quote:
I think we've got to back up here and explore some church history. The idea of a 'me and my bible in plain english' is a statement born out of technology. Before the printing press, you couldn't cleave the bible from the church. And even the best bible, by itself, struggles to convey context.
Wait a second, Zobel just claimed above that the EO doesn't rely on councils. And I don't think that the EO is quite as unanimous as you claim. They may claim unanimity of some Church doctrines, but there's a lot of dissent on any number of other issues.Quote:
The authority of the orthodox church comes from their unanimous agreeance about the nature of God, and their protection of how things were done. Their authority derives from being the counsels that discussed these concerns over 1500 years ago and maintains their authority through their refusal to change anything about their beliefs or practices since. Thats a lot better foundation than me or your or anyone on their own just reading a non study note version of the bible in english.
I have to say that I take issue with the above statement in its particulars. I agree on the statements as a whole, but I think you and I would mean completely different things despite using the exact same words. Regarding the multiplicity of faiths, I don't see how you get around the fact that Orthodox, Catholics, Anglicans, Oriental Orthodox, and the Assyrians can all legitimately claim Apostolic Succession all the way back. And the early church easy consisted of all of these different strains simultaneously. So the entire church up to about 400 AD included all of these variations together, but now those variations all still exist but are separate. How is someone supposed to look at those options and say that one has a stronger claim? Are they not all Christian? Hasn't each persevered just like all the others with their rituals and beliefs intact and unchanged? Every argument for authenticity, veracity, and tradition can equally apply to any of these branches. Even the Anglicans, since there are examples of the ancient patriarches granting permission for rulers to divorce and opposition to the supremacy of Rome is also found in ancient times. So it sort of hurts my brain to hear someone say that Christianity is undivided, even by the very strictest sense of liturgical, apostolic Christianity.Quote:
It seems that you're now dividing faith, belief, salvation, and Christianity into different buckets. I can't see how this would work on any level. To begin with, there is one Faith, passed down once for all to the saints, connected to one Lord, and one baptism. There is accordingly one salvation, through this one faith. There are not, for a Christian, a multiplicity of faiths any more than there are a multiplicity of Lords or baptisms or salvations.
Belief and Faith are scripturally identical - they are literally the same word. The symbol of Faith of Nicaea begins with the verb "pisteuo" - belief, faith. Christians have since the time of Nicaea used these words to represent the one faith we hold in common - the symbol is that which implies the other. When we confess the symbol of faith, we are confessing a commonality of experience as represented by these words - the unity of the faith, which St Paul ties closely to the knowledge of the Son of God. This is one reason why they are said before communion.
As there is only one faith, and one salvation, there is only one Christianity. Separating faith, knowledge, understanding is dividing intellectual assent from grace-filled faith, as we come to know the Lord. This is not a set of logical claims which are ratified by the tightness of the argument - although the fathers have taken great care to not say logical falsehoods - it is experience which informs faith, and as St Gregory the Theologian said, it is faith which completes our argument
ramblin_ag02 said:I have to say that I take issue with the above statement in its particulars. I agree on the statements as a whole, but I think you and I would mean completely different things despite using the exact same words. Regarding the multiplicity of faiths, I don't see how you get around the fact that Orthodox, Catholics, Anglicans, Oriental Orthodox, and the Assyrians can all legitimately claim Apostolic Succession all the way back. And the early church easy consisted of all of these different strains simultaneously. So the entire church up to about 400 AD included all of these variations together, but now those variations all still exist but are separate. How is someone supposed to look at those options and say that one has a stronger claim? Are they not all Christian? Hasn't each persevered just like all the others with their rituals and beliefs intact and unchanged? Every argument for authenticity, veracity, and tradition can equally apply to any of these branches. Even the Anglicans, since there are examples of the ancient patriarches granting permission for rulers to divorce and opposition to the supremacy of Rome is also found in ancient times. So it sort of hurts my brain to hear someone say that Christianity is undivided, even by the very strictest sense of liturgical, apostolic Christianity.Quote:
It seems that you're now dividing faith, belief, salvation, and Christianity into different buckets. I can't see how this would work on any level. To begin with, there is one Faith, passed down once for all to the saints, connected to one Lord, and one baptism. There is accordingly one salvation, through this one faith. There are not, for a Christian, a multiplicity of faiths any more than there are a multiplicity of Lords or baptisms or salvations.
Belief and Faith are scripturally identical - they are literally the same word. The symbol of Faith of Nicaea begins with the verb "pisteuo" - belief, faith. Christians have since the time of Nicaea used these words to represent the one faith we hold in common - the symbol is that which implies the other. When we confess the symbol of faith, we are confessing a commonality of experience as represented by these words - the unity of the faith, which St Paul ties closely to the knowledge of the Son of God. This is one reason why they are said before communion.
As there is only one faith, and one salvation, there is only one Christianity. Separating faith, knowledge, understanding is dividing intellectual assent from grace-filled faith, as we come to know the Lord. This is not a set of logical claims which are ratified by the tightness of the argument - although the fathers have taken great care to not say logical falsehoods - it is experience which informs faith, and as St Gregory the Theologian said, it is faith which completes our argument
That said I do agree with the statement in a different way. I think there is only one Christianity, and it encompasses every one of every creed that has a heart that reflects Christ and puts mercy, love, charity and hope over cruelty, selfishness, hatred and greed.
There is only one faith. This is axiomatic as a confessional starting point, but witnessed to in the scriptures. St Jude describes it as the hapax or once for all faith, traditioned (paradidomi) to the holy ones. St Paul calls it the the faith of the Gospel, expresses that St Titus and he share a common faith, says specifically there is one faith, because there is one God, and that this faith is the source of unity. There is a baseline fact here - the Apostles taught something.Quote:
Regarding the multiplicity of faiths, I don't see how you get around the fact that Orthodox, Catholics, Anglicans, Oriental Orthodox, and the Assyrians can all legitimately claim Apostolic Succession all the way back.
So when you say "the early church easy consisted of all of these different strains simultaneously" I don't agree. This is, to me, either an appeal that there never was a group that had all the truth, or that the divisions are historical accretions, or that there never was one apostolic teaching. But I reject all of these, I don't think that's the promise of the scriptures, and I also don't think the storyline you're painting is accurate.Quote:
We have learned from none others the plan of our salvation, than from those through whom the Gospel has come down to us, which they did at one time proclaim in public, and, at a later period, by the will of God, handed down to us in the Scriptures, to be the ground and pillar of our faith...It is within the power of all, therefore, in every Church, who may wish to see the truth, to contemplate clearly the tradition of the apostles manifested throughout the whole world; and we are in a position to reckon up those who were by the apostles instituted bishops in the Churches, and [to demonstrate] the succession of these men to our own times...In this order, and by this succession, the ecclesiastical tradition from the apostles, and the preaching of the truth, have come down to us. And this is most abundant proof that there is one and the same vivifying faith, which has been preserved in the Church from the apostles until now, and handed down in truth.
To these questions I would answer : the same way Christians always have: by looking to what was passed down, unchanged, from the time of the Apostles. Nominally, yes.Quote:
How is someone supposed to look at those options and say that one has a stronger claim? Are they not all Christian?
To this I say no, and no I do not agree.Quote:
Hasn't each persevered just like all the others with their rituals and beliefs intact and unchanged? Every argument for authenticity, veracity, and tradition can equally apply to any of these branches.
I think the challenge - or perhaps the fear - that Protestants (especially Reformed Protestants) have with this idea revolves around the fear of decent to idolatry. When our focus - and our love - shifts from Christ, towards the manner in which we worship Christ (and how long we've done it this way or that way), we tread on dangerous ground. Put simply - do we love that which points us toward Christ more than Christ? I think we Protestants can be guilty of loving the Bible more than Christ for example.Zobel said:
People get really touchy about this, but it really shouldn't be contentious. You should believe that you are practicing the faith of the Apostles, in its generalities and its particulars, and you should strive in every way to take hold of what they passed on, and what generations of Christians before you did, in unity of confession and faith. If you don't think that what you do in worship, in prayer, and in practice is the same as what St Paul taught, you should reconcile that. I believe that what I have been taught has a full participation in the experience and teaching of the Apostles. I believe that the teaching of the Church is the same as what St Jude described, and that our confession is fundamentally identical to the confession made by St Timothy in front of many witnesses. To the extent that there is variance is heterodoxy, whether that is in my own understanding and praxis or in others. What I think is very dangerous is denying that there is such a thing as small-o orthodoxy.
Well the flip side must also be true if you don't like my take. If you think the Catholics, Anglicans, Oriental Orthodox and Assyrians are not Christian now, then they have been non-Christian since their very roots. Because their stance really hasn't changed. So if a Copt today isn't Christian then neither was Athanasius, because it's the same faith. So either the modern Copts are still Christians or Athanasius never was. Under your definition of an unchanging eternal church, there's no room at all to say "that was fine then but it isn't fine now".Zobel said:
Right, so it seems you're choosing the either the multiple apostolic faiths or accretion explanations. Either the Copts and the Assyrians are both continuing authentic Apostolic tradition, and the differences were at the source, or they're possibly also both continuing authentic Apostolic tradition and the differences are additions not original to the faith.
I don't think what you're saying about the arbitrary date of 300 AD is correct, though. I mean by this same argument you could say that before Nicaea Arians also were part of a common Christian Church too. The idea almost seems to be that there is no actual faith until it is described in an affirmative way. I disagree. Arians were in error before Nicaea. Nestorians were following a different faith before Ephesus. The gnostics sects as well.
The idea that a group exists legitimizes it seems false, because then you can only wait for truth to come in when a sect dies out. Do you think Mormons have a valid apostolic faith? I don't, to be clear, but by your view here it seems hard for you to say why not - they still exist "unchanged" (by their reckoning).
Now, I don't think a binary approach is good, as I've said. I don't think variance is necessarily some kind of condemnation. Truth is salvific, but any truth is salvific, less truth just less so. I would say that heresies show what is genuine as St Paul says. So I do think we can use this to kind of gauge whether a difference is truly major or minor. Copts and Orthodox are as near as I can tell functionally identical with the exception of the definition of Chalcedon. Rome and the East are not. Protestants and the East are not. I conclude that whatever the differences may be, miaphytism is more minor than, say, the papacy and filioque or ideas like sola scripture etc.
I would say it this way. The Lord - who is Christ Jesus - taught us how He wanted to be worshipped. This worship is fundamentally linked to sacrifice - food, hospitality, participation in a shared event. Read closely the feasts and festivals of the OT. Yahweh is the God who feeds His people. We come to Him to be fed (literally, spiritually, metaphorically). And in the fullness of this we are fed by His own Body, His own Blood. As our post-communion prayers say, He willingly gives His flesh to us as food, and this is 1000% in line with everything we see in worship and the character of God in the OT.Quote:
I understand (I think) that you would argue that the Apostles taught us how to worship Christ properly, or most effectively perhaps? And yet, worship and communion (imperfect as it might be) happens wherever 2 or more are gathered in His name, no? I like how James simplifies things:
This is so vague as to be unhelpful. What stance? When did the idea of a borderline between Anglicans and anyone else begin? When was there such a thing as a difference between a Copt and an Orthodox? I mean, for that matter, when was there a difference between a Jew and a Christian? These concepts of borders and heresy and orthodoxy are temporal realities that cannot be projected backwards in the past. You can't say St Athanasius was a Copt because the category didn't exist in his time. Just like you can't say that St Paul was a Christian over and against being a Jew.Quote:
their stance really hasn't changed
Jabin said:
But every man is responsible before God. If the Inquisition had ordered you to participate in torture and burning of Jews, would you have acquiesced? Do you think it was right for the church to sell indulgences to raise money for St. Peter's Basilica? Was it right for the Popes to father illegitimate children, including from their own daughters? Would it have been wrong to question the extravagant luxury of the bishops and cardinals, living in mansions that rivaled kings, while the peasants of the Middle Ages were starving to death?